Big-Picture Thinking
To the Editor:
Holly Burkhalter provides us with a long-awaited perspective on the positive contributions of conservative and liberal philosophies for controlling the HIV/AIDS epidemic ("The Politics of AIDS," January/February 2004). Her discussion points out that both points of view are integral to controlling the relentless worldwide spread of HIV. She concludes, "If a common front can be matched with some common sense, the results could be truly impressive."
But within her otherwise excellent presentation, she succumbs to the very temptation that she seeks to overcome: questioning the relative efficacy of abstinence versus prevention approaches. There are no studies to inform us of how different types of behavior affect the rate of HIV infection, but one can safely conclude that it is lowered by more than one factor: use of condoms, mutual monogamy, delayed sexual intercourse, and, yes, abstinence. Add to this HIV counseling and testing, needle exchange programs, testing of blood products, and prevention of mother-to-child HIV transmission, and you have a comprehensive public health approach for prevention.
In this context, the relative contribution of an individual prevention method is unimportant. What counts is an integrated approach to the control of HIV that treats each method of prevention as essential. Such an approach is absolutely essential if we are ever to control this devastating epidemic.
Arthur J. Ammann
President, Global Strategies for HIV Prevention
Related
American evangelicals have put the fight against AIDS on Washington's map, even while clashing with other activists over strategy. Now all must unite behind a comprehensive approach stressing effective practices in prevention and treatment.
With the end of the Cold War, and of the concerns it involved, it is natural that US attention should turn to the solution of domestic and economic problems. It is exaggeration to read such a shift as "some form of isolationism".
The decade of the sixties has produced a new school of isolationism. The reaction to the war in Vietnam, the demands of domestic problems and the seeming hollowness of traditional assumptions of international involvement- all give rise to this outlook. The isolationism is sometimes incoherent, occasionally inconsistent, and very attractive to a large portion of the younger generation.

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